If you add your superfat by putting in extra oils, you have no control over what oils are left in the soap. If you put it in at trace (or after gel stage in hot process) then you get more say in which oils survive saponification. This seems like a good way to save on expensive oils whose primary purpose is for skin care.
This isn't true, Once the lye starts to work its way accross the soap, it will eat all saponifiables in its path.Trace lasts a few minutes, saponification takes a full day,and the lye is indiscriminate in what it eats.
The purpose of superfatting is to give yourself some leeway, so if you're slightly lye heavy, there is extra oil in the soap for the lye to eat, so you don't end up with soap that has too much lye for you to use it on the skin. Some people do shred their lye heavy soap for laundry soap however.
Another reason people like superfat is to add extra moisturizing properties to the soap - in other words, to have excess oil means your skin won't be stripped of its own oils when you use the soap, although I suppose a good soap formula won't strip you anyway.
Yes, this is also what I feel, but does this mean I can just add the super fat into the base oil?
Yes, this is also what I feel, but does this mean I can just add the super fat into the base oil?
Some oils have more unsaponifiables than others. Olive pomace has a higher rate of unspaonifiables than extra virgin olive oil. So you can control to a certain amount how the lye will react to your oils by choosing certain oils and fats.
http://tinyurl.com/cvn7xeo
Enter your email address to join: